Key stat: Both teams play strong defense. The Cavaliers have allowed only 92.6 points a game in the playoffs and held opponents to a 40.8% field-goal percentage. The Hawks have given up 95.7 points and opponents have shot 42.5%. The Hawks are good at moving the ball, handing out 25.4 assists per game, tops in the playoffs. The Cavaliers run lots of isolation plays, handing out just 18.1 assists per game.

The Minnesota Timberwolves won the lottery and secured the top pick for the draft, which will be held at the Barclays Center in New York on June 25.

The top prospects in the draft include Kentucky's...

(Eric Pincus)

Outlook:LeBron James always seems to drag along his Cavaliers teammates in the playoffs, in contrast to the Hawks who get it done collectively. Cleveland's All-Star point guard Kyrie Irving didn't play in the second half of Cleveland's playoff-clinching Game 6 against Chicago because of left foot tendinitis and a right foot strain. But Irving said Monday he would play in Game 1 on Wednesday. James will need Irving, who's averaged 19.8 points per game in the playoffs, to be close to his best for the Cavaliers to have a chance at winning the series. In the playoffs James leads the Cavaliers in scoring (26.5), rebounds (10.2), assists (7.9) and steals (1.9). Guards J.R. Smith, Iman Shumpert and Matthew Dellavedova have made major contributions for the Cavaliers and big men Timofey Mozgov and Tristan Thompson have emerged as forces on the defensive end. The Hawks have six players averaging double figures in the playoffs, showing that they don't need a star to succeed: DeMarre Carroll (17.1), Paul Millsap (15.7), Al Horford (15.6), Jeff Teague (15.3), Kyle Korver (11.3) and Dennis Schroder (10.1).